Friday, July 15, 2011

Emmanuel Obadia in a podcast (French)




BFM : L'innovation en Europe et le secteur des logiciels
09 juillet 2011
Actualité : baromètre BVA/Syntec pour 01Business&Technologies. 
  • GAEL SLIMAN, Directeur Général adjoint de BVA opinion, 
  • BRUNO VANRYB, PDG d'Avanquest Software et président du Collège des « éditeurs de logiciels » du Syntec Numérique, 
  • EMMANUEL OBADIA, Senior Vice President Enterprise Products chez Sage. 
Coup de pouce à une start up : Jérôme Valette, directeur général de aEnergis, une start up qui optimise la collecte des déchets grâce à un système de capteurs radio.


Sunday, April 24, 2011

Online leads: do you act timely to respond?


Reading an interesting research summary in HBR that I wanted to share.

Whether you are a B2B or B2C company, the time taken to respond to prospects stimulus online can significantly change the ROI of your web presence. As this research shows, many firms are too slow to follow up on these leads. As HBR states:
- 37% responded within an hour
- 16% within one to 24 hours
- 24% took more than 24 hours
- and 23% never responded at all!

As companies are investing significantly to get prospects out of the web, they should have a much better turnaround, don't you think?

Reasons not to do so include retrieving leads from CRM daily rather than on the fly, sales forces focusing on their own generated leads and rules for leads dispatching not effective enough ("fairness" can be damageable).

Where are you with this? Better know where your marketing ROI is headed sooner than later.

Happy Easter.



- Posted using BlogPress from my iPhone

Wednesday, March 23, 2011

How to measure your brand's online influence?

Several tools are emerging to help you do this, and Inc. touched on this in an interesting post about it and even providing in their opinion the 11 best web analytics tools. They come back on how Web Analytics 2.0 is defined:

  1. The analysis of qualitative and quantitative data from your website and the competition
  2. To drive a continual improvement of the online experience of your customers and prospects
  3. Which translates into your desired outcomes (online and offline)

Inc. concludes like this:
"Measuring online influence can be useful—and has potential to reinforce your social-media strategy (hey, it just feels cool when you get a high score)—particularly for growing brands looking to utilize technology to make their jobs easier and more effective. However, it's not for everyone." -- Dave Smith, Inc.
Another post on GigaOm from Georgina Laidla highlights the 5 Ways Brands Influence Social Media Strategy:
"It’s not just the way organizations engage through social media that matters: the portrayal of a business brand in this space is affected by a range of factors."
And the factors she lists

  1. Network & Tools - the tools and network you use say something about your brand
  2. Types of engagement
  3. Who's making the update?
  4. Degree of integration with other offerings
  5. People your brand follows, friends and fans

preaching for an evolving approach.

At the end of the day, there is in my opinion no option for all of us to engage into measuring our brand's influence online. We better get starting ASAP and make our plans on how to do it. This is what I am doing already for the brand I work for which faces an interesting challenge to do it with one voice globally. Your feedback and experiences are more than welcome on this blog.

Sunday, March 20, 2011

Unhappy Customers Can Be Won Back via Social Media

According to a report (pdf) sponsored by RightNow, Social Media is an effective way to bring back unhappy customers. Marketing Charts reports about it as well here. The research present a number of facts to support this: 

- 68% of consumers who posted a complaint or negative review on a social networking after a negative holiday shopping experience got a response from a retailer.
- 18% of those turned into loyal customers, 33% turned around and posted a positive review and 34% deleted their original negative review
On top of it 50% of consumers say great customer service/experience influences their decision to buy from a specific online retailer and after a positive shopping experience 31% purchased more from this retailer.
Finally, 28% of consumers looking for information or support with online shopping researched what other customers said on social networking and reviews websites.
In many cases, the 32% of US consumers who posted a negative review of a holiday shopping experience in 2010 and were ignored by the retailer simply had a bad impression reinforced. Six in 10 (61%) of these consumers said they would have been shocked had the retailer contacted them.
So YES social media has a growing influence on your customers loyalty and you should be paying attention to it. Actually we all know that a happy customer is the most effective sales influencer when turned into an advocate.

According to the same research, for consumers who had a positive exeprience this holiday season online, 21% recommended the retailer to friends and13% posted a positive online review about the retailer.



Thursday, February 24, 2011

2010: Resurgence for Digital Media in the Wake of the Recession


I mentioned previously this interesting research from Comscore, and I wanted to highlight more general trends about digital media coming out of it.
Comscore outlines that the digital media industry responded with significant growth across various media platforms to the wake of the recession. As they say: 
"Industry innovations brought an unprecedented number of options to consumers as digital media continued to weave itself even tighter into the fabric of Americans’ daily lives." -- comScore
Key findings about consumer trends, highlighted in the report, include:
  • Following 2 years of depressed consumer discretionary spending, the economy showed signs of improvement, leading to positive growth for the e-commerce market. Total U.S. e-commerce spending reached $227.6 billion in 2010, up 9 percent versus the previous year. Travel e-commerce spending grew 6 percent to $85.2 billion, while retail (non-travel) e-commerce spending jumped 10 percent to $142.5 billion for the year.
  • Social networking continued to gain momentum throughout 2010, with 9 out of every 10 U.S. Internet users now visiting a social networking site in a month, and the average Internet user spending more than 4 hours on these sites each month. Nearly 1 out of every 8 minutes online is spent on Facebook.
  • The U.S. core search market grew 12 percent overall in 2010, driven by a 4-percent increase in unique searchers and an 8-percent increase in the number of search queries per searcher.
  • U.S. Internet users received a total of 4.9 trillion display ads in 2010 with display ad impressions growing 23 percent in December 2010 versus December 2009. Social networking sites, which now account for more than one-third of all display ad impressions, were a significant driver of growth in the display ad market in 2010.
  • In December 2010, the average American spent more than 14 hours watching online video, a 12-percent increase from the prior year, and streamed a record 201 videos, an 8-percent increase.
  • Major milestones in mobile were crossed during the year as smartphones reached 1 in 4 mobile subscribers and 3G penetration crossed the 50 percent threshold. Approximately 47 percent of mobile subscribers are now connected Internet media users (via browsers, applications or downloaded content), up 8 percentage points from the previous year.
In short, businesses should consider these aspects of Digital Media in their strategies to be successful in the coming years:
  1. e-commerce
  2. Social Media Presence
  3. Search
  4. Advertising 
  5. Video on line as convergence with traditional TV continues to blur
  6. Mobile media for both consumption and as an alternative e-commerce platform



Sunday, February 20, 2011

Ecommerce spending jumped 9% to $227.9B in the US

As I track the evolution of e-commerce, I found these results coming from Comscore pretty interesting.

e-commerce revenue reached $227.6B for the entire year, growing 9% compared to 2009, and varies per industry:

  • travel e-commerce up 6% to $85.2B
  • Retail (non travel) up 10% to $142.5B
  • Top growing category: Consumer Electronics +19% (flat panel TV and mobile devices are first)
This signals a recovery since the end of 2008, after a two years depressed situation due to the economic downturn. The 2010 holiday season was at a peak with a 12% growth, reinforced by some promotional activity - most notably free shipping. The Cyber Monday (Nov 29th) did peak at $1.028B surpassing for the first time the $1B mark. Groupon.com attracted 10.7M unique visitors in December, up 712% vs 2009.

Interesting evolution since my post e-commerce revenue over $100B back in January 2007 i.e. it more than doubled since 2006 even with a major downturn in between.

So, how is your e-commerce strategy going? Maybe a good time to revisit if you have one and definitely start one if you haven't.

If you want to know more, you can download the comScore 2010 US digital year in review report.

Tuesday, February 15, 2011

Social Marketing: identify influencers for free

source Elliott Lemenager 
This is the question I get very often even from marketers already involved and active in Social Marketing: how to identify influencers? Yes, seems like 101 but actually not so easy to figure it out.

The notion of influencers came first to me with Regis McKenna back in the 80's -- wow already! Here is the quote:
« The infrastructure includes all individuals between a vendor and its customers that can influence the buying process. » -- Regis McKenna
Pretty wide isn't it? But for B2B marketers like me this is so true and so daunting. Today's Marketing 2.0 reinforces and stresses our imperative to identify them and reach out to them through social media because we need them to be involved in the conversation, hopefully positively.

To start with today, I wanted to share with you this blog post: Social Marketing: Hybrid Approach to Identifying Targeted Influencers. Dive in as Elliott's post has lots of tips and links to tools and present it in a very simple way. His Hybrid approach actually refers to a combination of manual operations and free services you can use if you're on a budget contraint and cannot hire an agency to help you. Enjoy!

source Elliott Lemenager 

Saturday, February 05, 2011

Social media marketing: build a lasting methodology


Here is an interesting post about optimizing your social media marketing from David Kirkpatrick, Marketing Experiment.


Justin Bridegan, Marketing Manager MECLABS Primary Research said, “One of the most difficult parts of social media marketing is creating a lasting methodology that works.  Time and resources continue to be two of the most difficult challenges social marketers face.”
Justin’s key takeaways:
  1. Start small and test – “You don’t know what you don’t know”
  2. Having a solid social marketing methodology in place will allow you to focus on real obtainable goals.
  3. Determine the most effective offers for your campaigns including: Contests, incentives and promotions
  4. Weigh Quality vs. Quantity with your offers, and remember the need for balance in your engagement
  5. Successful campaigns don’t always equate to revenue, but can be one of many contributing components

Related resources on Marketing Sherpa

    Saturday, January 22, 2011

    How does your marketing compare to best in class?

    A recent research from Aberdeen about Marketing Asset Management gives an opportunity to compare to the best in class.
    Aberdeen uses 3 key performance criteria to compare:

    1. 44% of the sales forecasted pipeline generated by marketing, as compared to 2% contribution for laggards organizations,
    2. An average 9% reduction Year-over-year cost of market asset creation, as compared to a 6% increase among laggards,
    3. 15% average decrease in year-over-year time-to-market of content of all types and formats, as compared to an increase among laggards.
    To achieve best in class performance, you need to

    • Allow all geographies and business units to customize marketing content with proper control
    • Centralize asset approval and distribution to expedite time to market and improve content

    Saturday, January 01, 2011

    Saturday, December 25, 2010

    In 2010 people get the news online on par with newspapers: first time ever

    According to eMarketer research, 2010 sees US consumers get the news, all demographics combined, online as much as on the radio or even more than through newspapers. This is a confirmed trend that I highlighted already some time ago, but it was at that time only for one demographic.
    "As a news delivery vehicle, the internet is second only to television, according to the Pew Research Center. More than 90% of Americans use one or more sources to get their daily news, and the number of digital channels is growing. Pew found that, on a typical day, 44% of US adults got news through a digital channel, either online or via mobile internet, email, social networks or podcasts." -- eMarketer
    Should you rethink your PR activity? Yes you can!

    Here is now some more details about the behavior of the US population sliced by demographics:

     To publishers, digital publications taking advantage of our proliferating mobile devices are to be taken into account to survive or thrive.

    “While the number of digital newspaper readers will continue to grow as digital devices proliferate, the number of print newspaper readers will remain flat or continue to drop.” eMarketer senior analyst and author of the new report “The Digital News Audience: 24/7 Participation.”

    And finally, let me share with you what role Twitter plays in this:


    Happy Holidays

    Happy holidays #in on Twitpic
    Today in Trocadéro, Paris

    Tuesday, November 23, 2010

    e-commerce in the US is up 13.6% at $38.8B in Q3 2010 vs. Q3 2009, more than 2x of traditional sales

    e-commerce is continuing its progression despite a poor economic environment. As this latest report from the US Department of Commerce shows:
    "The third quarter 2010 e-commerce estimate increased 13.6 percent (±2.5%) from the third quarter of 2009 while total retail sales increased 6.0 percent (±0.5%) in the same period. E-commerce sales in the third quarter of 2010 accounted for 4.2 percent of total sales."
     e-commerce sales totaled $38.8B for Q3 2010, accounting for 4% of total US Sales. In 10 years, this proportion did quadruple (1.2% in 2001).

    According to another research from DataMonitor, the global online retail sector grew 14.5% in 2009 to reach $348.6B! When considering North America accounts for 45.7% of this total, that's nearly $160B in NA alone, up 60% from my last inquiry in Jan 2007.

    At the same time, for H1 2010 we're still growing on the internet at a pace of more than 2M+ new web users per week according to Internet World Stats, where Asia is leading the curve to over 825M users vs. NA 266M, but their penetration rate is still low 21,5% in Asia vs. 77% in NA.

    e-commerce is going to just explode in Asia over the next few years and my prediction is it's going to be mobile first!

    Friday, October 29, 2010

    Social Media Increases Small-Business Exposure

    Interesting research by American Express OPEN highlighted by emarketer this week showing that SMB in the US actually consider Social Media activity increases their business exposure. The Social Media usage is making progress as well:
    "While just one in 10 business owners reported using social networking for marketing last year, 39% indicated they did in September 2010" -- eMarketer
    Facebook seems to lead their with 27% using it, LinkedIn 9%, Twitter 8% and Blogging 5% are far behind. But resistance is still very present for SMBs, more than three in five reported not using social media at all, and the biggest reason they gave was that it did not apply to their industry.

    We'll get there.

    Tuesday, October 12, 2010

    Social Media Revolution Video



    This is a refresh of this very good video that provides factual data to make all of us aware of how fast Social Media and Web 2.0 waves are progressing in our daily life. I use very often this eye opener video in my presentations.

    Tuesday, September 14, 2010

    Why are so many things broken? Seth Godin talks about poor design

    Why are so many things broken? In this entertaining talk - one of the favorites of Gel 2006 - gelconference.com/​c/​gel06.php

    Seth Godin gives a tour of things poorly designed, the reasons why they are that way, and how to fix them.

    Seth Godin at Gel 2006 from Gel Conference on Vimeo.

    Wednesday, September 08, 2010

    The Thin Line Between Liking a Brand and Liking Its Social Marketing

    Good article on Emarketer


    While Facebook fans and Twitter followers are often out for deals, they also care about showing support for brands they love—but that might not be an invitation to be marketed to. What does a brand fan's self-expression mean for the kinds of messages marketers should push out? Full Article




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